1st Edition

The Science of Stories An Introduction to Narrative Psychology

By János László Copyright 2008
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Science of Stories explores the role narrative plays in human life. Supported by in-depth research, the book demonstrates how the ways in which people tell their stories can be indicative of how they construct their worlds and their own identities.

    Based on linguistic analysis and computer technology, Laszlo offers an innovative methodology which aims to uncover underlying psychological processes in narrative texts. The reader is presented with a theoretical framework along with a series of studies which explore the way a systematic linguistic analysis of narrative discourse can lead to a scientific study of identity construction, both individual and group.

    The book gives a critical overview of earlier narrative theories and summarizes previous scientific attempts to uncover relationships between language and personality. It also deals with social memory and group identity: various narrative forms of historical representations (history books, folk narratives, historical novels) are analyzed as to how they construct the past of a nation.

    The Science of Stories is the first book to build a bridge between scientific and hermeneutic studies of narratives. As such, it will be of great interest to a diverse spectrum of readers in social science and the liberal arts, including those in the fields of cognitive science, social psychology, linguistics, philosophy, literary studies and history.

    1. The Place of Narrative in Psychology.  2. Foundations of Narrative Psychology.  3. Narrative Psychology and Postmodernism.  4. Narrative Psychology's Contribution to the Second Cognitive Revolution.  5. On Representation.  6. Theory of Social Representations.  7. Identity and Narrative.  8. Language and Soul.  9. Narrative Psychological Content Analysis.  10. The Computerization of Content Analysis in Narrative Psychology.  11. Reliability and Validity Studies of the Narrative Content-Analytic Programs.  12. Social Memory and Social Identity: The Social Psychology of History.  13. National Identity in the Mirror of Folk History.  14. Roots and Perspectives of Scientific Narrative Psychology. Appendix. References.

    Biography

    János Lászó is professor of social psychology at the Institute for Psychology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest and the University of Pécs, where he is currently head of the Institute of Psychology and of the Doctoral School in Psychology.

    "Lazlo has put together one of the most intellectually compelling books on narrative psychology that has been written. This book should be studied by scholars across all the social sciences and humanities." - James W. Pennebaker, University of Texas at Austin, USA

    "This book combines an excellent overview and expansion of the field of narrative psychology. Its scholarship is outstanding: it is comprehensive, integrative, and advances the state of the art. It is a text that I would use for my own research and that I would definitely recommend to my students." - Sandra Jovchelovitch, London School of Economics, UK